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"Wobble" is the second single by rapper V.I.C. from his debut album Beast. The single was produced by Mr. Collipark . Before recording this song, he made a track called "Wobble (Skit)" to introduce the song "Wobble".
Lewis Carroll's parody of the lyrics was published in Lays of Mystery, Imagination and Humour in 1855: [3] I dreamt I dwelt in marble halls, And each damp thing that creeps and crawls went wobble-wobble on the walls... The opera is featured in two short stories from James Joyce's 1914 collection Dubliners: "Clay" and "Eveline". [4]
"Wobble Wobble" is the debut single by 504 Boyz, released in 2000 from their debut studio album, Goodfellas. The song was produced by Beats by the Pound member Carlos Stephens and featured seven members of the group, Master P, C-Murder, Silkk the Shocker, Mac, Magic, Krazy and Mystikal.
It included the hit single "Wobble Wobble", a "bounce-flavored song" [2] which peaked at #17 in the U.S. [citation needed] In 2002, new members were introduced as part of the New No Limit rebrand. Choppa, Currensy, Afficial, and T-Bo were on the 2002 album Ballers , which produced a minor hit single Tight Whips .
Wobble or wobbles may refer to: "Wobble" (song), a single by V.I.C. "Wobble", a song by Flo Rida from his 2015 EP My House; Wobble, an album by Black Market Karma; Wobbles (equine disorder), a disorder of the nervous system in dogs and horses; Wobble base pair, a type of base pairing in genetics
V.I.C. was born Victor Grimmy Owusu in 1987 in Corona, Queens to a mother from New York City and a father from Ghana.At ten, he wrote his first song, a drug awareness rap for his elementary school.
Burger King’s viral "Whopper" jingle has become an internet phenomenon, spurring memes and mashup songs because sports fans can't seem to escape the earworm.
The word bamboleo means "wobble", "sway" or "dangle" in Spanish. The song's refrain, "bamboleo, bambolea, porque mi vida yo la prefier* vivir así", translates to: "Swaying, swaying, because I prefer to live my life this way." Part of the song is an adaptation of the 1980 Venezuelan folk song "Caballo Viejo" by Simón Díaz. [1]